Dumbest work meetings (1 Viewer)

Sbarcher

Well-Known Member
My wife works for the NHS and she came home one day and said the cleaners had an afternoon tuition on how to mop floors.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
My wife works for the NHS and she came home one day and said the cleaners had an afternoon tuition on how to mop floors.

I mean, that seems pretty relevant.

I was called into the Leicester office for a day to do an all day meeting that we all spent most of in silence on our laptops 🤦
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
We employed this guy to do team building once


He dressed in various guises including a character like Windsor Davies’ Sergeant Major making everyone march around and yell in their face

Then he was in drag and was making strange Carry On suggestions to people

At one point he did a demonstration of Land Roger accessories and said regarding one item if it was there to cover up a particularly large bush - queue Pervy leer

Very motivating
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I’m in the wrong line of work

He actually started as a crocodile Dundee character and some raisins were strategically placed on the floor which he ate and identified the animal droppings he thought they were as he’d just escaped from the outback and had lived on animal shit. I did want to point out we were in Northamptonshire but didn’t want to spoil the fun.
 

napolimp

Well-Known Member
I've been in a few (so called) pre-meetings to work out what we want the meeting agenda etc to look like. Basically a meeting to plan a meeting

These ones are good. The meeting pyramid scheme. Organise a meeting to work out what meetings you need, then each of those meetings will spawn their own meetings.
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
I remember having a safety meeting. It was at a smokeless fuel plant, so we had a lot of mechanics and engineers and a lot of maintenance teams etc. We were the office team, so it didn't really involve us, but we were invited in anyway

The seminar went on all day and they were endlessly droning on about safe work practices and ensuring everything was safe and leaving everything safe for others and putting up appropriate signs such as "slippy floor" or "men working overhead" etc.

They said "when you are working you must put up appropriate signage and ensure you don't leave open manholes or electrical panels etc."

The meeting ended and I was first to leave. I actually walked out with the safety manager right behind me and as soon as I opened the door, there was a floor panel left up right outside the door in the corridor. No sign, no workmen, no warning. Just a great big gaping hole.

I turned to him and said "Norman look at this. There's a huge hole in the floor! Isn't that the exact thing you just talked about?"

And he turned me and shrugged and said "well you better watch where you are walking then" and wandered off in the opposite direction.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
I've just come out of a meeting about a grievance raised by an employee about one of their colleagues using smelly hair product.
Tbf he was a dwarf
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
I worked for a company once that insisted on sending you on various courses all of a similar theme and quite often for a week, 90% of which were with the same training company. The first one was usefulish as a new employee although I’d been recruited from the opposition in an industry I’d worked in for 5 years. When they tried to send me for the 3rd year running I refused to go pointing out it was more productive to be in work for a week than on a course going over the same things again. They accepted that but then the following year they got me to go again insisting that it was a new course. So I went, it wasn’t. They’d just shuffled the day’s around so you did the same things in a different order. Never went on one again, although they tried every year. It turned out that the director of the training company they mostly used was a relative of one of our directors and the order to send people on it came down from head office.
 

Sky_Blue_Daz

Well-Known Member
I was on a course years ago about inclusion and how everyone in society should be treated the same , the guy doing the course said he sent his kids to private school as he earned a very good salary . I thought that negated the course to be honest
 

Robinshio

Well-Known Member
ive been asked to go to a meeting in london with a colleague next week
2 of us will have a 20 minute slot for the rest of them to say thankyou for something we have been working on - Condescending as F***

Everyone else in the meeting is then going for Xmas lunch, but we are not invited
There is definitely an expense claim going in for the 2 of us for a bloody good lunch
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
We insist on people being in the office who then spend a lot of the day on Teams calls, often with people in the same office. Even more annoying without headphones and hearing both sides.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
We insist on people being in the office who then spend a lot of the day on Teams calls, often with people in the same office. Even more annoying without headphones and hearing both sides.
You for homeworking then rob?🤔
 

olderskyblue

Well-Known Member
We had somebody from Laughology come in once to tell us how it was important to have a laugh

Sent from my Pixel 7 using Tapatalk
Nick, can you get this person to come in here? Might cheer up some of the miserable buggers on the site 😁
 

napolimp

Well-Known Member
Nick, can you get this person to come in here? Might cheer up some of the miserable buggers on the site 😁

A one-on-one session for Matt Smith may be useful.

I was on a course years ago about inclusion and how everyone in society should be treated the same , the guy doing the course said he sent his kids to private school as he earned a very good salary . I thought that negated the course to be honest

That's instead of the alternative course, everyone in society should be treated differently. The approach we take at the moment.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
You for homeworking then rob?🤔
I actually quite like going in, but hate it when the office is rammed. Just becomes hot and noisy.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
I actually quite like going in, but hate it when the office is rammed. Just becomes hot and noisy.
Maybe generational then,oh there's definitely benefits of being in and around but I think a mix of both.The waste of time and energy literally over selling a few coffees/lunches transport etc especially when energy is a rip off for X reasons?
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
With water and soap, dry mop does not work.

Taking Notes GIF by One Chicago
 

LastGarrison

Well-Known Member
I once had a sales meeting where we were made to stand up for the whole meeting as supposedly that’s how the Japanese do it and it ‘concentrates the mind’.
 

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